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In January 2003, Hardy briefly turned into a heel (villain) after he attacked Van Dam and Shawn Michaels . [1] [54] [55] It ended a month later when he saved Stacy Keibler from an attack by then-villain, Christian . [56] In February, he had a brief program with Michaels, which saw the two team up. [51] [57] Then, in storyline, Hardy began dating Trish Stratus after saving her from Steven Richards and Victoria in March. [58] Hardy and Stratus had a brief on-screen relationship that saw the duo talking backstage and teaming together in matches. Hardy competed in his final match (his first departure) against The Rock and lost. [1] [59] Hardy was released from WWE on April 22, 2003. [1] [60] The reasons given for the release were Hardy's erratic behavior, drug use, refusal to go to rehab, deteriorating ring performance, as well as constant tardiness and no-showing events. [7] [60] Hardy also cites "burn out" and the need for time off as reasons for leaving WWE. [24]

In 1985, to counter the AWA's Super Sunday , the NWA's Starrcade and WCCW's Star Wars, the WWF created its own flagship show, WrestleMania I , held at Madison Square Garden and broadcast on 135 closed-circuit networks . The future of not just the WWF's national experiment but the whole professional wrestling industry came down to the success or failure of this pay-per-view. WrestleMania was an extravaganza marketed as "the Super Bowl of professional wrestling". The concept of a wrestling supercard was nothing new in North America; the NWA had been running Starrcade a few years prior to WrestleMania, and even the elder McMahon had marketed large Shea Stadium cards viewable in closed circuit locations. However, Wrestlemania I drew the interest of the mainstream media by including celebrities such as Mr. T and Cyndi Lauper to participate in the event. MTVs popularity and coverage of the Women's wrestling feud created a great deal of interest in WWF programming at this time.